Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a well-established treatment for anxiety disorders, and evidence is accruing for the effectiveness of acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT). Little is known about factors that relate to treatment outcome overall (predictors), or who will thrive in each treatment (moderators). The goal of the current project was to test attentional bias and negative emotional reactivity as moderators and predictors of treatment outcome in a randomized controlled trial comparing CBT and ACT for social phobia. Forty-six patients received 12 sessions of CBT or ACT and were assessed for self-reported and clinician-rated symptoms at baseline, post treatment, 6, and 12 months. Attentional bias significantly moderated the relationship between treatment group and outcome with patients slow to disengage from threatening stimuli showing greater clinician-rated symptom reduction in CBT than in ACT. Negative emotional reactivity, but not positive emotional reactivity, was a significant overall predictor with patients high in negative emotional reactivity showing the greatest self-reported symptom reduction.
Background and Objectives
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and acceptance and commitment
therapy (ACT) have both garnered empirical support for the effective
treatment of social anxiety disorder. However, not every patient benefits
equally from either treatment. Identifying moderators of treatment outcome
can help to better understand which treatment is best suited for a
particular patient.
Methods
Forty-nine individuals who met criteria for social anxiety disorder
were assessed as part of a randomized controlled trial comparing 12 weeks of
CBT and ACT. Pre-treatment avoidance of social situations (measured via a
public speaking task and clinician rating) was investigated as a moderator
of post-treatment, 6-month follow-up, and 12-month follow-up social anxiety
symptoms, stress reactivity, and quality of life.
Results
Public speaking avoidance was found to be a robust moderator of
outcome measures, with more avoidant individuals generally benefitting more
from CBT than ACT by 12-month follow-up. In contrast, clinician-rated social
avoidance was not found to be a significant moderator of any outcome
measure.
Limitations
Results were found only at 12-month follow-up. More comprehensive
measures of avoidance would be useful for the field moving forward.
Conclusions
Findings inform personalized medicine, suggesting that social
avoidance measured behaviorally via a public speaking task may be a more
robust factor in treatment prescription compared to clinician-rated social
avoidance.
Amygdala-vlPFC connectivity during affect labeling predicted treatment responder status following CBT or ACT for social anxiety disorder. This suggests that the functioning of neural circuitry supporting emotion regulation capacities may be a 'gateway' to receiving benefit from psychological treatments. Future work should aim to replicate this effect in a larger sample and consider methods for enhancing functional connectivity within this circuitry as a potential treatment adjunct.
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